It
is two years into the Nazi occupation of Holland. Each month, Corrie ten Boom
writes in The
Hiding Place, the occupation grew harsher, the restrictions more
numerous. Corrie’s brother Peter violates one of the latest edicts and plays
the Dutch national anthem, the “Wilhelmus,” during a church service. He’s
imprisoned for three months.
More
Jews are being arrested and deported to the camps in the east. The numbers
seeking help and hiding remain steady. One friend organizes the “burglary” of
an identity card office, including a very real physical beating to convince the
Germans. Corrie is later taken to a meeting of the Dutch underground, bicycling
with a contact with tires wrapped in cloth to muffle the sound.
This
is the line between amateur underground operations and the professionals.
Corrie and the ten Booms will cross that line, and what results is the
construction of a secret room in their home, a place that Jews and others can
be temporarily hidden, the “hiding place” of the book’s title.
The
risks for the family were enormous.
And
yet they took them, with barely a second thought. As Corrie’s father would say,
“In this household, God’s people are always welcome.” His meaning extended to
God’s original chosen people, the Jews.
Was
this courage? Foolhardiness? Recklessness?
Or
was it an expression and extension of the ten Booms’ faith?
What
does it mean to have that kind of reckless faith? Their lives, the lives of the
extended family, the security of their church were all at great risk. And yet
they continued.
We
haven’t faced that kind of test of faith and courage here in the United States,
but many say the time is coming. Christians in the Mideast have faced it and
continue to face it. Globally, the number of persecutions of Christians has
been increasing. We are likely fooling ourselves if we believe that something
like this could never happen here.
I
think about my children and my three grandsons. Would my faith be that reckless
if I knew I would be putting them in jeopardy?
It’s
a question I hope I never have to answer.
But
I need to be prepared to answer it.
Led
by Jason Stasyszen and Sarah Salter, we’ve been reading and discussing The Hiding Place. To see more posts on
this chapter, “The Secret Room,” please visit Jason at Connectingto Impact.
Photograph: Members of the Dutch
underground in 1944, via Wikimedia
Commons.
3 comments:
Such an amazing book! I was captivated by it when I was in middle school and read it several times.
That is a question I hope I never have to answer either. What an amazing story The Hiding Place is!
Blessings, Glynn!
It's a tough one for sure. I think so many today can so easily get focused on self and how something impacts us as an individual (I'm as guilty as anyone). To do something simply because it the right thing to do, no matter the cost--that's a worthy sacrifice. If we are persecuted for doing good, there is a reward. Deep things to ponder, Glynn. Thank you.
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